Connected Learning

Jarrod Lamshed

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The Essential 55

When I was growing up, I learned that manners are important. If I failed to use them, I was quickly reminded by my parents. A reminder that was usually accompanied by ‘THE LOOK’. When I am in public places now, it’s hard not to feel that this focus on manners is no longer there.

During a quick trip to the shops tonight I saw children standing on chairs at a dining table, adults chewing with mouths open, a child happily bouncing a basketball while walking through the busy mall, and even someone proudly picking their nose while talking to the check out operator. I try my hardest not to be a grumpy old man, but this is not ok.

In our classroom, we are doing our best to bring the focus back. For our students to be successful in this world, they need to be able to present well and act appropriately in public.

This year, our class is using a program called “The Essential 55” by American educator Ron Clark. As with any program we have modified it to be relevant to our classroom but the big idea has stayed the same. Each of these ‘essential’ 55 rules are based around good old fashioned manners. The program gives an official classroom standing to many of the ideas that we were brought up with.

From holding the door open for others, to shaking hands and saying thank you, the boys have latched on to these ‘rules’ brilliantly. When they slip up I can ask ‘which rule did you just break?’ and they can tell me the rule number and recite the rule. Most of the boys not only shake my hand and say good morning to me each day but also make the effort to seek out all of the teachers in our building to do the same. It is a fantastic thing to see. It has helped them to be seen in a positive light in the school community with several teachers and parents commenting on their efforts.

Ron Clark’s program is simple but effective. So effective for him that it has been the subject of ‘The Ron Clark Story’, a movie starring Matthew Perry.  For us, I hope the program continues to grow and we see the manners the boys are showing continue throughout their lives.

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New Beginnings

“And now let us welcome the new year, full of things that never were”

Rainer Maria Wilke

The beginning of each school year comes with a mix of excitement and trepidation. For the most part we prepare ourselves to step into a class of kids that, for the most part, we don’t know very well. We don’t know what connects them to their learning, we don’t know who our classroom leaders are and we don’t know which of these kids are most likely to send furniture flying across the room…. but it’s exciting finding all of this out.

In our classroom, the new year is a time for new beginnings. If things have gone badly for you in the past, we put that aside and start fresh. To me, this is very important. As we work toward creating a team of learners from 31 individuals, each child needs to know that they are not being judged by the poor choices of the past. This can be a difficult thing to do (especially when faced with the variety of opinions voiced in the staffroom) but it is vitally important.

If kids feel that we have written them off and have low expectations for them, then they will live up to those low expectations. Set the bar high, and for the most part (with the right support) they will strive to meet these goals.

This year also brings a new beginning for our staff team at Hackham East. With three new members of the school leadership team and three new teachers to our school, it is a great opportunity to develop new professional relationships and connections that we can learn from as teachers.

New beginnings, however, don’t mean that we cast aside the connections of the past. After requests from former students, we are working toward including ‘old scholars’ in this year’s Kapa Haka group. Keeping these connections is very powerful. Several former students are also working toward setting up a charity event at their high schools that they began at Hackham East. I am looking forward to supporting them with this. This year I’m looking forward to exploring our new connections at Wirreanda High School as we work together to better support the learning and wellbeing of our students as they transition to the next stage of their learning.

Two weeks in, I’m feeling positive and am looking forward to the year ahead.

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AITSL Teacher Standards

This week, myself and three other staff at Hackham East have been involved in filming an “Illustration of Practice” for the Australian Institute of Teaching and School Leadership (AITSL). Based around our boys education program the filming took place over two days, aiming to create a 20 minute documentary looking at classroom management.

In theory, the idea of having a film crew follow you around is terrifying. In reality, it’s even more terrifying! Once the fear subsides however, the process becomes extremely valuable.

This filming opportunity came at the same time I decided to turn my blog into a Profesional Learning Portfolio. Both of these processes involved me needing to unpack the AITSL Teacher Standards. For those who are unfamiliar with the standards, the following is from the AITSL website:

The National Professional Standards for Teachers comprise Seven Standards which outline what teachers should know and be able to do. The Standards are interconnected, interdependent and overlapping.

The Standards are grouped into three domains of teaching: Professional Knowledge, Professional Practice and Professional Engagement. In practice, teaching draws on aspects of all three domains.

Within each Standard, focus areas provide further illustration of teaching knowledge, practice and professional engagement. These are then separated into Descriptors at four professional career stages: Graduate, Proficient, Highly Accomplished and Lead.


Exploring the standards has helped me to reflect more clearly on my teaching practice. It has shown me the areas that I reflect on naturally and highlighted those that I take for granted. It has challenged me to think critically about how I do my job and in doing so has improved my teaching.

In our job we can never be ‘good enough’. As teachers we need to be continually improving. I believe that the Teacher Standards are a powerful tool to help us do this. To use this tool effectively, however, we need to open ourselves up to critical self reflection and to the honest feedback of others. For me, this has been a challenging but rewarding process.

While AITSL were filming at Hackham East, I was also asked to film a “Teacher Feature” about our class use of social media. They also took photos of our classroom to share on the AITSL Facebook page.  The photos can be found here, and the ‘Teacher Feature” is posted below.


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Judging Professional Development

We all know that Professional Development sessions can go either way. They can be inspiring, or they can be a complete waste of time. For me, the success (or lack of) comes down to my engagement, the engagement of those around me, the quality of the conversation in the room and the change of practice that comes after the session ends.

Today, Hackham East Primary hosted a full day session with George Couros. George is an educator from Canada who spoke to us about the importance of being connected educators and helping our students to become connected learners. It was a presentation that made sense.

I have seen George present twice before and even still, I gained a whole lot of new ideas. Among the revisiting, I came away with new knowledge to help me turn my professional blog into a professional portfolio. I came away prepared to lead my students in changing their individual blogs into individual learning portfolios. These are simple but important things that I hadn’t made a connection with before this session.

Those around me were having similar breakthroughs. At times the room went completely silent while people were busy signing up for twitter accounts and signing up for their own class and personal blogs. Feedback from some in attendance showed a transformation from ‘doubter’ to ‘convert’. That in itself is not an easy feat. To see people making change to their practice already is a great thing to see.

On top of all of this ‘intended’ learning were some outcomes that I didn’t expect. During the afternoon session I made a comment on Twitter about the needs of year 7 students to be able to continue blogging on their current blogs as they move to high school. This was met with a response from our local high school leadership about meeting to look at ways to make this happen. Tweeting about connecting with parents on social media, opened up a range of links from other educators around the world about how they are managing this.

The final unintended outcome was more personal. My daughter, Alyssa, recently started blogging and through the support of George, has been inspired to keep at it much longer than I expected. Because of the support he has shown (and possibly a mutual love of Justin Bieber), Alyssa has felt a strong connection to him. Today she was able to meet him in person for the first time, and has been glowing ever since. For her, this was an important opportunity and I thank George for making it a special time for her, by giving up a lot of his precious break time to talk with her and for including her in his presentation.

I look forward to seeing change unfold in our school as people reflect on the days learning. I highly recommend attending a workshop if you get the opportunity.

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Important Connections

As we move towards the end of our school year here in Australia, we prepare ourselves for change. We start thinking about which classroom we will be given next year, which kids we will have in next years class and whether we’ll be stuck with the crappy old desks that nobody wants (or whether we can palm them off to the ‘yet to be placed’ teacher). We tend to fall into the trap of thinking about our own needs and can sometimes place this self preservation over the needs of our students.

In our schools we are often guilty of looking at student learning in one year chunks. As teachers, this is time we generally have out students for so it makes sense. For our students, their time with us is just one small step in a much larger learning journey. As teachers, we need to get better at passing on data and other information about our students. Without good handover of information students can feel like the first term of their new school year is wasted while yet another teacher tries to work out where they are at. This handover of information is even worse when it comes to the transition from primary school to high school.

This afternoon saw the first steps of change take place for this transition process in our school community. At the invitation of Wirreanda High School (our local high school), Principals and year 7 teachers from our local area were invited to an afternoon tea meeting to discuss the transition process. This provided an opportunity for discussion. We talked about the concerns our students have about moving to high school, and about ideas for making this process better. Most importantly, we were able to make connections.

As we move forward in the process of improving transition, these connections will be the most important tool we have. Putting faces to names (or twitter handles) gives us someone to contact to pass on important information about students that will help them on their path forward. Hopefully it also allows for high schools to feel comfortable contacting primary schools to support them in working with students even after they leave us.

I would like to acknowledge the staff at Wirreanda for taking this step and look forward to strengthening the new connections that were made today.

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School finds single-sex learning the key to improving males’ performance














GIRLS consistently outperform boys in the classroom – so two teachers at Hackham East Primary School decided to try something new to bridge the achievement gap.

In 2008, the school decided to take a gamble by introducing its first single-sex classes after hearing a talk by an expert in the field.

It has never looked back.

Founding teacher Jarrod Lamshed said behavioural issues immediately subsided, attendance picked up and the boys participated more actively.

“Basically, it comes down to better meeting the needs of boys in schools,” Mr Lamshed said.

In South Australia,the education gap between girls and boys has increased.

Last year 98 per cent of girls who started Year 8 in 2007 made it through to graduate, but only 78 per cent of boys did. That was a difference of about 20 per cent, compared with 15 per cent in 2000.

Almost 90 per cent of girls who completed the SA Certificate of Education last year earned a university entrance score, compared with 81.4 per cent of boys.

A recent review of the new SACE revealed the compulsory subject – the Research Project – provided an “inherent advantage” for female students, most of whom achieved As and Bs, while almost half the male students received Cs.

During his 30-year career as a teacher and school leader, the issue of boys’ education became a passion for Ian Lillico, the expert who inspired teachers at Hackham East Primary.

He left teaching to pursue research on the subject and now works with schools to help improve the performance of boys.

“The evidence internationally is that the separation of genders can be valuable for students who are 11, 12, 13 and 14,” he said.

Dr Lillico said the way boys learn was different to girls and that over the years changes in the curriculum had not been particularly “boy friendly”.

“In the past boys tended to do well at maths and science but now every subject is seen as a literacy subject and because they are wordy, boys are not doing as well,” he said.

“Maths should be maths, English should be English. If everything is done as a long evaluation or essay you will favour girls and boys will give up and think, ‘Oh, I can’t do this, it’s too hard’ even if they can.”

Dr Lillico did concede there was some danger in single-sex classes.

“Some of the most successful boys’ classes are often taken by two women or a man and a woman. It’s very important if a school decides to have single-sex classes not to make it too blokey,” he said.

As a Year 6/7 boys’ class teacher, Mr Lamshed said he could more easily tailor the classroom program to individual learning needs.

“Having the boys together reduces the number of learning styles in one classroom,” he said. “We found in that first year we had kids who were writing only a few lines but when the girls were not around they were writing more, and better. A lot of the social issues disappeared.”

To better cater for the more practical learning-style, the physical set-up of the classroom was transformed, with rows of desks replaced by sofas, round desks and coffee tables with cushions on the floor.

“The traditional classrooms are about sit, be quiet and you will learn … with the boys we’ve gone the other way because we want them together and talking,” Mr Lamshed said.

Principal Robert Thiele said the school’s six single-sex classes were popular in the community and some families from outside the area were enrolling especially for them.

Michelle Poldervaart has four children at Hackham East – three are in a single-sex class including her eldest son, Toby, in Year 7.

“He was doing quite poorly before then and once in the boys class (which he started in Year 5) he just thrived,” she said.

“He was behind by about three years in his maths and now he’s come along really fabulously.”

While single-sex education is popular in private schools, it is still fairly uncommon in the public schools.

SA Primary Principals Association president Steve Portlock said the creation of single-sex classes was a local school decision that needed to be made in the best interest of students.

“It might be a school has seen the need for a particular group of boys to work together and has designed a specialist curriculum,” he said.

Association of Independent Schools of SA executive director Garry Le Duff said the variety in the private sector catered for parents looking for either single-sex or coeducation.

“I think one of the emerging issues in recent times is what are the ways to help boys improve retention and participation rates in learning,” Mr Le Duff said.
 

  • Education Editor Sheradyn Holderhead
  • The Advertiser
  • August 31, 20129:30PM

Original Source – Adelaide Now – Adelaide Advertiser – http://bit.ly/PSNaiQ

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